The 21st Execution of 2023
The state of Texas executed Brent Ray
Brewer on November 9, 2023 for the 1990 robbery and murder of Robert Doyle Laminack in Amarillo, reported Texas Public Radio.
As Brewer faced his execution, his final words
expressed remorse for the murder: “I hope you find peace."
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected
Brewer’s final appeal arguing the death sentence was the product of invalid
testimony from a discredited psychiatrist.
“The main reason he was sentenced to death is because
the state presented unreliable and false evidence from a guy named Dr. Richard
Coons, who they have used in multiple cases in Texas. And Dr. Coons has
basically been found by the courts to be an unreliable witness,” Attorney Shawn
Nolan told TPR. “His testimony and his science has been found to be junk science.”
Nolan said Coons' testimony should have been ignored
because Coons never met with Brewer to give him an examination.
The regulations for doctors to testify about
somebody's mental health status require them to examine the person, and that
did not happen in this case.
“Coons never met Brent, yet he got up on the stand and
said that Brent had no conscience and that he would be a future danger to
society, even in prison. That was just outrageous testimony.” Nolan said. “That
should never have been presented to a court.”
Nolan also argued the death penalty was not justified
because Brewer was not a threat to society. Brewer expressed remorse for his
actions prior to his final words at his execution, including in a recent video
provided by his attorneys.
“Even though it's 33 years ago, I don't even know
where to begin. Now, how do you fix something that can't be fixed? The 53 year
old guy you're looking at now is not the 19 year old I was in April of 90. I
don't even know that kid. How do you explain stabbing somebody and then running
off and you don't know what happened until later on?” Brewer said.
“When you're 19, 20 and you're confused, or you're on
drugs, or you're drinking, or you're hanging around the wrong people, you have
no real value system. I guess you'd call it a moral compass,” he said. “I
sobered up in the county jail and realized that I had done something I can't
undo, and I had to live with that every day.”
Brewer was given a second sentencing trial in 2009,
where Coons testified for a second time. Randall County District Attorney James
Farren sought the death penalty and for the second time, a jury agreed.
On Tuesday, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles
voted unanimously against commuting Brewer's death sentence to a lesser crime
or to grant a six month reprieve.
Brewer was the seventh inmate Texas has executed this
year and he was the 21st person to be executed nationwide, according to
the Death
Penalty Information Center.
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